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The Abused Sister's Spectacular Vengeful Comeback

The Abused Sister's Spectacular Vengeful Comeback

Author: : Xin Miaomiao
Genre: Romance
I died as an MMA champion in an octagon halfway across the world. But instead of finding peace, I woke up face-down in the cracked Ohio dirt, trapped in the severely malnourished body of an eighteen-year-old girl named Alissa. Along with this frail, useless body came a flood of agonizing memories. Her glamorous sister, Ainsley, treated her like a slave, starving her and working her to the bone while playing the perfect saint to the outside world. Worse, her brother-in-law Kristopher, a highly respected high school teacher, was a disgusting predator. He constantly cornered her in dark hallways, whispering sickening threats disguised as affection, waiting for the perfect moment to completely ruin her. "You are meant to be mine, little bird. This is our secret." The original Alissa had lived her entire life in suffocating terror. She was completely powerless, eventually dying of sheer exhaustion and silent despair in a suffocating cornfield while her abusers lived comfortably. They thought she was just a pathetic, broken toy they could crush without consequence. But the dull, defeated glaze in Alissa's eyes is gone now. In its place is the sharp, calculating focus of a killer. My new body might be weak and starved, but my mind is a lethal weapon. The predators are about to become the prey.

Chapter 1

The September sun baked the cracked Ohio dirt, turning the cornfield into a suffocating oven.

Alissa dragged her heavy boots through the narrow rows. The dry, coarse corn leaves whipped against her bare arms, leaving thin, stinging red scratches across her pale skin.

Her fingers were numb. The woven wicker basket in her hands, overflowing with heavy ears of corn, felt like it was filled with solid lead.

Every step sent a sharp jolt of pain up her shins. Her stomach was an empty, hollow cavern, cramping so violently that it made her spine curl forward.

A wave of nausea punched her in the gut. The air around her suddenly felt too thick to breathe.

Her knees buckled. The strength simply vanished from her legs.

The wicker basket slipped from her raw, blistered fingers.

Heavy ears of corn tumbled out, hitting the dry earth with dull, mocking thuds.

A few yards away, standing comfortably in the cool shade of a large oak tree, Ainsley snapped her head up.

Ainsley wore a pristine, floral sundress that didn't have a speck of dust on it. Her perfectly manicured eyebrows pulled together in deep annoyance.

"Are you kidding me, Alissa?" Ainsley shouted, her shrill voice cutting through the humid air. "You are so clumsy! Pick that up right now. You can't even do one simple chore without making a mess!"

Alissa opened her cracked lips to apologize. She wanted to say she was sorry, that she was just so tired.

But no words came out. Only a dry, rattling wheeze scraped the back of her throat.

Inside her chest, her heart gave two violent, erratic thumps against her ribs.

Then, it stopped. A terrifying, absolute stillness settled in her chest.

Her thin, malnourished body folded forward like a puppet with its strings suddenly snipped.

She fell straight down. Her forehead slammed into a hard, sun-baked clod of dirt, sending a small cloud of brown dust into the stagnant air.

The darkness swallowed her instantly. The endless years of exhaustion, hunger, and silent tears simply evaporated into nothingness.

For three seconds, the cornfield was dead silent.

Then, a violent tremor ripped through the girl lying in the dirt.

Her right index finger twitched. It wasn't a weak flutter, but a sharp, neurological spasm.

Her lungs expanded with brutal force. She sucked in a massive, greedy gulp of air, tasting the metallic tang of blood and the bitter scent of dry soil.

Her eyes snapped open.

The dull, defeated glaze that had clouded Alissa's eyes for eighteen years was gone. In its place was a sharp, predatory focus. The eyes of a killer. The eyes of a champion who had died in an octagon halfway across the world, only to wake up in the dirt.

Her brain fired off immediate tactical commands. Threat assessment. Break fall. Roll to a defensive guard.

She commanded her core to twist and her arms to push off the ground.

Nothing happened.

Her triceps shook violently. She managed to lift her right shoulder two inches off the dirt before her muscles simply gave out.

She collapsed back into the dust, her cheek scraping against a sharp rock.

Panic didn't set in. Only cold, calculating realization. This body was useless. It was starved, atrophied, and completely devoid of fast-twitch muscle fibers.

Suddenly, a blinding spike of agony drove straight through her temples.

Memories that didn't belong to her shattered into her consciousness like broken glass. Ainsley's sneers. A dark, cramped bedroom. The smell of cheap cologne. The constant, gnawing hunger.

She clenched her jaw so hard her teeth ground together. She forced herself to breathe through her nose, locking the pain away in a mental box, absorbing the intel.

The sound of tires crunching on gravel interrupted her thoughts.

An old, rusted pickup truck slammed on its brakes on the dirt road bordering the field.

Brenda McCoy, a heavy-set woman in denim overalls, shoved the driver's door open and hit the ground running.

Brenda's heavy boots pounded against the dirt as she rushed into the corn rows.

She dropped to her knees beside the fallen girl, her chest heaving.

"Alissa! Oh, sweet Jesus, honey!" Brenda cried out, reaching a thick, calloused hand toward the girl's pale face.

The fighter's instinct flared. The moment Brenda's hand moved, Alissa's brain screamed to intercept the wrist, lock the elbow, and snap the joint.

But her analytical mind overrode the instinct.

She forced her muscles to go completely slack. She allowed Brenda's warm, rough fingers to pat her cheek.

No threat. Civilian. Sympathetic. The assessment was instantaneous.

Alissa let her eyelids flutter shut, perfectly mimicking the dead weight of a deeply unconscious victim.

Brenda let out a ragged sigh. She slid her thick arms under Alissa's back and knees.

With a grunt of effort, Brenda lifted her.

Alissa felt the sickening lightness of her own body. She weighed nothing. She was skin and brittle bones.

Brenda carried her out of the suffocating heat of the cornfield, marching steadily toward the idling pickup truck.

Chapter 2

Brenda carried Alissa across the overgrown front yard, her heavy boots crushing the dry weeds.

She stepped onto the Knox family's wooden porch. The old floorboards groaned loudly under her weight.

Without breaking stride, Brenda lifted her boot and kicked the peeling screen door open. It slammed against the siding with a sharp crack.

Inside the living room, Ainsley jumped.

She was sitting on a faded floral sofa, holding a tall glass of iced lemonade. The sudden noise made her flinch, spilling a splash of cold, sticky liquid onto the wooden coffee table.

Ainsley looked up. When she saw her filthy sister in Brenda's arms, her upper lip curled in a flash of pure, unfiltered disgust.

But it only lasted a fraction of a second.

Ainsley blinked, and her face instantly transformed. Her eyes widened, her mouth fell open in a perfect O of shock, and fake tears pooled in the corners of her eyes.

She set the glass down and rushed forward, her hands fluttering near her chest.

"Oh my god! Alissa!" Ainsley gasped, her voice trembling with exaggerated sorrow. "What happened to my poor sister?"

Behind her closed eyelids, Alissa listened to the high-pitched, theatrical tone. Her stomach tightened in disgust. The memories were right. The sister was a parasite wrapped in pretty packaging.

Brenda glared at Ainsley, her jaw set in a hard line.

"She passed out in the dirt, Ainsley," Brenda snapped, not stopping as she moved toward the hallway. "She's working in that sun with no food in her belly. She needs water and sugar, right now."

Ainsley sniffled, wiping a non-existent tear from her cheek.

"I know, I know," Ainsley whimpered defensively. "But things are so tight. We barely have enough for dinner. I haven't eaten either."

Brenda let out a loud, derisive snort. She ignored Ainsley and marched down the narrow, dimly lit hallway.

She pushed open the door to Alissa's bedroom and gently lowered her onto the single bed. The old mattress springs shrieked in protest, sagging deeply under the minimal weight.

Brenda grabbed a thin, pilled blanket from the foot of the bed and pulled it up to Alissa's chin.

"You better go to that kitchen and boil some sugar water," Brenda warned, pointing a thick finger at Ainsley who was hovering in the doorway. "Or I'm calling social services."

Brenda turned on her heel and stomped out of the house.

The screen door banged shut. The rumble of the pickup truck's engine faded down the road.

Ainsley didn't drop her act immediately. She walked over to the bedroom window, pulling the thin curtain back just an inch, and watched like a hawk until Brenda's rusted truck completely disappeared around the bend. Only when she was absolutely certain there were no witnesses did the air in the bedroom shift.

The fake concern vanished from Ainsley's face, melting away to reveal a cold, hard mask of absolute irritation.

She walked over to the bed and stood over Alissa, crossing her arms.

"You stupid bitch," Ainsley muttered under her breath. "Now I have to wash these dirty sheets because you couldn't stay on your feet."

Ainsley reached down. Her fingers pinched the soft flesh of Alissa's inner thigh, right through the thin fabric of her worn jeans.

She twisted the skin hard, her manicured nails digging in deep.

A blinding flash of pain shot up Alissa's leg.

Every instinct in her fighter's brain screamed to strike. To grab Ainsley's wrist, pull her off balance, and crush her windpipe.

But Alissa didn't move a single muscle. She didn't let her breathing hitch. She didn't let her eyelashes flutter.

She absorbed the pain, letting it burn into her nervous system, using it to anchor herself to this new, pathetic reality.

Ainsley held the pinch for three agonizing seconds before letting go with a disgusted sigh.

Convinced her sister was truly out cold, Ainsley turned around and walked out of the bedroom. Her heels clicked sharply against the floorboards as she headed back to the living room, completely ignoring the order to make sugar water.

Alissa waited until the clicking stopped.

She slowly opened her eyes. The room was cast in shadows.

She pushed the thin blanket aside and looked down at her leg. A dark purple bruise was already blooming on her inner thigh.

She pressed her thumb directly into the center of the bruise. The sharp spike of pain cleared the remaining fog from her brain.

She needed to assess her assets.

She closed her eyes and sifted through the memories. Ainsley was the public martyr, the saint who took care of her sick sister, while privately draining her dry.

Then there was Kristopher. The brother-in-law. The respected high school teacher.

The memories of him made Alissa's skin crawl. The lingering touches in the hallway. The heavy, wet breathing near her neck when Ainsley wasn't looking.

Alissa slowly curled her hands into fists. She focused on the tension in her forearms, her biceps, her shoulders.

The feedback was dismal. She couldn't even hold a proper guard for more than a minute right now. Attempting an armbar would likely result in her own shoulder dislocating.

She had to play the long game. She had to remain the victim until she had the physical capital to become the executioner.

Suddenly, the heavy thud of men's dress shoes echoed on the front porch.

The front door opened. Kristopher was home from work.

Alissa immediately laid her head back on the flat pillow. She closed her eyes, slowed her breathing to a shallow, rhythmic pace, and pulled the blanket back up.

Chapter 3

The bedroom door, hanging slightly off its rusted hinges, was pushed open. The metal scraped against the wood with a high-pitched squeal.

Kristopher's tall, broad silhouette filled the doorway, blocking the yellow light spilling from the hallway.

He stepped inside, his leather shoes making soft, deliberate sounds on the floorboards.

The air in the small room instantly grew heavy. The sharp, chemical scent of cheap cologne mixed with the dry smell of chalk dust drifted over the bed.

Alissa kept her breathing perfectly even, playing the role of the unconscious invalid.

She felt the mattress dip slightly as Kristopher leaned over her.

A large, warm hand, damp with sweat, pressed against her cheek.

His thumb stroked her skin. The movement was excruciatingly slow, heavy with a sickening kind of ownership.

The hand slid down her jawline, the rough calluses catching on her skin. His fingers wrapped loosely around her fragile neck.

Beneath the blanket, Alissa's hands clamped into tight fists. Her fingernails bit so deeply into her palms that she felt the skin threaten to break.

She calculated the distance. If she drove her fingers into his eyes right now, she could blind him. But she didn't have the stamina to finish the fight if he panicked and fought back.

From the dining room, Ainsley's voice rang out, sweet and demanding.

"Kris, honey! Dinner's getting cold!"

The hand on Alissa's neck went rigid.

Kristopher quickly pulled his hand back, as if he had touched a hot stove.

He leaned in closer, his lips hovering just inches from her ear.

"Get well soon, little bird," he whispered, his voice thick with a dark, suppressed hunger.

He straightened up, turned, and walked out of the room, pulling the door shut behind him with a soft click.

Alissa opened her eyes. The darkness of the room mirrored the absolute, freezing void in her chest.

Her heart was beating a steady, rhythmic drum of pure, unadulterated murder.

She took three slow, deep breaths, forcing the icy air into her lungs to cool the burning rage in her blood.

She listened intently. The clinking of silverware against ceramic plates and the muffled sounds of Ainsley's fake, bubbly laughter drifted through the thin walls. They were eating. She had time.

Alissa pushed the blanket off and swung her legs over the edge of the bed.

The moment her bare feet touched the cold wooden floor, her knees buckled. A wave of dizziness hit her, but she locked her jaw and grabbed the edge of the mattress, forcing herself to stay upright.

She dropped to her knees. The hard floor bruised her skin, but she ignored it.

Following the ghost of a memory, she reached her hand under the far corner of the sagging mattress.

Her fingers brushed against exposed, rusty springs and thick dust bunnies until they hit something hard and metallic.

She pulled it out. It was an old, faded tin candy box.

Alissa popped the lid off. Inside lay a small, pathetic roll of crumpled dollar bills.

Her fingers moved quickly, counting the cash. Seventeen dollars and twenty-five cents. It was the original Alissa's secret escape fund, saved over six agonizing months.

Beneath the money, folded into a neat, tight square, was a piece of white stationery.

Alissa unfolded it. The faint moonlight filtering through the dirty window illuminated the elegant, cursive handwriting.

You are meant to be mine, little bird. Don't tell Ainsley. This is our secret. - K

Alissa's stomach violently rolled. The physical revulsion was so strong she tasted bile in the back of her throat.

The suppressed memories of Kristopher's grooming-the lingering hugs, the whispered threats disguised as affection-crashed over her.

She gripped the note tightly. Her eyes narrowed into cold, calculating slits.

She took the seventeen dollars and shoved it into the lining of her worn bra. It was her only capital.

She placed the note back into the tin box, exactly how she found it, and shoved it deep under the mattress. She couldn't let him know she was aware. Not yet.

Alissa crawled back into bed and pulled the blanket up to her chin.

She crossed her hands over her stomach. Her brain shifted into combat mode, running through tactical scenarios like a supercomputer.

Kristopher was the immediate physical threat. He was a ticking time bomb of sexual violence. He had to be neutralized first.

She needed a weapon. Not a knife or a gun-those would land her in prison. She needed something that would destroy his life, his reputation, his absolute control.

An image flashed in her mind. Brenda McCoy's mother-in-law, Martha. The sweet old woman next door who loved her gadgets.

A cold, vicious plan began to take shape in the darkness.

Outside, the wind rustled through the dry cornstalks. Inside, Alissa smiled. It was a terrifying, bloodless smile. She closed her eyes and let her exhausted body slip into a light, watchful sleep.

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